Here are the best stock plays for artificial intelligence bulls

Among experts' recommendations for the best ways to play the rise of artificial intelligence are Alphabet, Amazon and Facebook, as well as Tesla as it moves into the autonomous driving space. Google has been the most active player in buying artificial intelligence companies, acquiring 11 as of earlier this month, according to CB Insights.

And venture capital investors are taking notice. Global artificial intelligence equity funding surpassed $6.6 billion across 1,241 deals from 2011 to the first quarter of 2016, according to CB Insights data, and equity finance in the space grew from $282 million in 2011 to $2.4 billion in 2015.

"I think AI — artificial intelligence — is of equal magnitude to have a huge impact among many sectors, and it really comes about because of the speed of the ability of computers to process information," Rob Lutts, chief investment officer at Cabot Wealth Management, said Wednesday on CNBC's "Trading Nation."

"Just in the last five years, we've really accelerated the ability to do that. So this has opened up a tremendous amount of opportunity for many different industries," Lutts said, pointing to Alphabet, Amazon and Facebook, which Lutts said all capitalize on, and benefit from, artificial intelligence because of the massive amount of data they use.

"Another really interesting industry that's being changed today — and it's a debate whether it's actually AI or not — is autonomous driving," Lutts said, forecasting artificial intelligence could transform the "whole transportation" significantly.

Tesla last month said that it would begin equipping all its vehicles with self-driving hardware, and automaker Ford last month said it hopes to sell over 100,000 self-driving cars a year starting in 2021, and begin selling self-driving cars to consumers by 2025.

"AI is going to play a big role as we move forward in the next 5 to 10 years," Manish Mehta, an expert in artificial intelligence and mentor at the Techcode AI+ Accelerator program, told CNBC in an email.

Resources: cnbc.com

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